Look out for the future of trains up the Colne Valley

Read the latest pronouncement by our new Transport Minister, it does not bode well for any improvement on the servives between Huddersfield and Manchester Victoria

Bus and rail users face ‘unwelcome consequences’, says transport minister

• £15.9bn Transport budget will have to be cut by at least 25%

• Environmental groups call for cuts in £6bn road building project

Dan Milmo

The Guardian, Monday 12 July 2010

Rail passengers, bus users and motorists have been warned that Britain’s transport system will suffer “unwelcome consequences” from public spending cuts of up to 40%, according to the Liberal Democrat transport minister, Norman Baker.

The Department for Transport has been asked to find cuts of between 25% and 40% to its £15.9bn budget before the autumn spending review, with the main candidates for the chop including the £5bn spent on the rail industry, followed by another £5bn a year for Transport for London and Crossrail, while environmental groups are calling for reductions in the £6bn road building programme.

Baker said achieving the cuts was “not impossible” despite strong protests from Network Rail and TfL that their cost savings programmes – launched long before the government was formed – are already cutting deep to the bone.

“I don’t think it is asking the impossible,” he said. But in a warning to commuters used to subsidized bus fares and motorists hoping for congestion-busting new roads schemes, he added that “nothing is safe”.

He said: “I think it will be difficult and will have unwelcome consequences. It is our job to mitigate the unwelcome consequences. We can ask for deferrals and ask for genuine efficiencies at Network Rail.”

Asked if Network Rail and TfL’s argument that they are doing enough already was acceptable, Baker said: “I always expect people in the transport industry to argue that their particular part of it needs protection. People will, inevitably, argue for their corner.”

In an indication that Network Rail’s £4bn annual grant will be under pressure, he added: “The department is very seized with the need to make Network Rail more efficient.”

Baker said the department’s capital spending programme, which includes the £16bn Crossrail project and the £6bn roads scheme, would probably not survive unscathed. The DfT’s capital spending plans have been limited to £7.4bn after a planned 1.25% annual increase in the budget was dropped – implying a cut in spending of £28.9bn this decade. Baker said: “I will be astonished if the entire capital spending programme we have got survives in its present shape. So there will be some disappointed people including, probably, ministers.”

The Conservative transport secretary, Philip Hammond, has in effect written off one of the Liberal Democrats’ key transport policies – reducing rail fares – by warning that the cap on ticket price increases might have to be lifted to lower the taxpayer’s contribution to rail fares.

Baker said “no decision” had been taken on rail fares but would not rule out an increase by his department. “The coalition document talks about fair fares. Nobody wants to put rail fares up. But we have got to come up with a package of measures which meets the requirement on the department to play our part in the budget reduction process.”

In an ominous reference to TfL’s annual budget, Baker acknowledged local authority concerns over the level of subsidy devoted to the capital, including its extensive bus network. “There is a feeling, justified or otherwise, that London gets a very good deal. If we are all going to have to take difficult decisions they have to be fair and not be seen to advantage one part of the country over another.”

Baker said the DfT was being forced to make unwelcome decisions because of a “fantasy” spending programme implemented by the previous government.

“It was callous electioneering. As someone who is regarded as being to the left [politically] I feel so angry. Labour’s policy of promising things it could not deliver was dishonest.”

Baker attempted to reassure bus operators that the department was not targeting the big five public transport groups – Stagecoach, FirstGroup, Go-Ahead, National Express and Arriva – despite intervening during a Competition Commission investigation by publishing a report that highlighted the sizeable profits generated by the groups from local bus networks.

Baker’s main responsibility as under secretary of state for transport are buses and regional transport. According to the Campaign for Better Transport, the bus industry receives more than £2bn a year from the DfT and the Communities and Local government departments. Baker said: “We have not got it in for them. We are driven by the need to ensure that the taxpayer gets a very good deal.”

Bus operators have been exercised by the threat of losing, or seeing a hefty reduction in, the £500m Bus Service Operators Grant. BSOG is under review and Baker has refused to guarantee its survival, although the transport secretary has expressed stronger words of support for the £1bn free bus scheme. “We are in favour of more people using buses.” He added: “But the bus industry has to understand that we are looking at every budget line because there is a spending review underway. Nothing is safe.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010

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Annual General Meeting: The Future

Smart held it’s fifth Annual General Meeting last Wednesday in Slaithwaite, June 23rd and was joined at the meeting by members of the newly formed Mossley Train group, in addition to a member of the STORM Rail action Group.

The meeting exchanged views and information on problems on the Manchester Victoria to Huddersfield Line . The different groups intend to come together over the next year to produce a common programme for the development of rail services on this line, as much as the protection of existing services in the light of government restrictions on spending.


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Smart still campaigns for a better service

For those unable to get hold of a copy of the Huddersfield Examiner article on June 3rd, here follows a copy of that article.

Passengers demand improvements at Slaithwaite and Marsden stations

Jun 3 2010 by Joanne Douglas, Huddersfield Daily Examiner

DIRTY trains and a PA system which broke after three days are just two of the complaints about Slaithwaite station from a local travel action group.

And now Slaithwaite and Marsden Action on Rail Transport (SMART) are demanding answers.

Tony Bowers said the PA system, installed on May 19 after a nine month absence had broken down just three days later.

He said improvements on the Huddersfield to Manchester Victoria service were needed urgently.

SMART are calling on Northern Rail to get moving on improving the station’s facilities for passengers.

Mr Bowers, of Slaithwaite, said: “It is significant that Northern Rail has, after an interval of some nine months, finally restored the PA system for passengers travelling from Marsden and Slaithwaite.

“The reconnection of the information tannoy on May 19 is to be welcomed, but the public announcement system only lasted three days. It had failed again by Saturday.”

He said the nine-month wait for passengers raised serious questions about the capacity of Northern Rail to fulfil its responsibilities of providing a service to the public. Last month the company won a two-year extension to its franchise to continue running after next September.

Mr Bowers added: “This information system is of considerable importance, not least because Northern Rail now appears to be cancelling regular weekday trains – currently those outside rush hour. “It is our experience that during the entire period of Northern franchise, not only have passengers been promised new rolling stock, but those travelling from Slaithwaite and Marsden have had to suffer the most broken down, ruined, leaking and dirty stock in the country.”

He said it was “frustrating” for people to be left waiting on the platform for a train that had been cancelled, but with no information telling them.

“We were told to call the train operator on our mobiles, but that’s a few minutes on a phone waiting to speak to someone – it’s not acceptable,” he said.

“When it’s an hourly service and people depend on it to get to work, not to be told if the train is coming or not, is frustrating.”

And he said the facilities on the West Yorkshire side of the service were poor in comparison to those in Greater Manchester, where there are platform ticket facilities and up-to-date display boards with information at stations.

Northern Rail secured a new deal after improving the punctuality of its services from 84%, when it took on the franchise in 2004, to 92% last year.

They say they have £100m for more and newer trains and to improve facilities at stations.

A spokeswoman for Northern Rail said: “We are aware of the ongoing problems with the PA system at Slaithwaite station and apologise for the inconvenience this is causing to our passengers.

“We have repaired the system several times and are investigating longer term solutions to provide consistent information to passengers.”

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Passengers are the last to know.

Pensioners, we all know, are an over-privileged bunch when it comes to public transport, what with their little cards which give them free transport on the buses. But many were greatly surprised to be told that their fares had gone up by an astonishing 42% on the local trains.

When asked, station officials said that there were posters warning everyone of the increases coming in at the same time as the new timetable on May 23rd.

Unfortunately, no-one questioned has managed to see one of these posters. Another official when questioned more closely said that he had read about the change in the Manchester Evening News, not a paper everyone reads in the Colne Valley.

SMART will be asking questions of Metro who presumably were responsible for agreeing to the increased fares and therefore advertising the change. What considerations were given to the ability of pensioners to bear the increased cost of travel.

But to go back to the real issue, and the increase of 42%. The fares for holders of the concessionary travel pass rose on May 23rd from 35p to 50p for a single journey and £1.00 for the return journey. This is now the standard fare within West Yorkshire.

At a £1.00, rail travel for pensioners is still extremely good value and many older people take good advantage of the travel across West Yorkshire to enjoy the variety of the area. But 42% without warning is a liberty.

Editor
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